Merck v. United States

6 Ct. Cust. 41, 1915 WL 20724, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1915
DocketNo. 1340
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 Ct. Cust. 41 (Merck v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merck v. United States, 6 Ct. Cust. 41, 1915 WL 20724, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 36 (ccpa 1915).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the following opinion of the court:

Goods invoiced as codeine hydrochlorate, codeine sulphate in powder, codeine pure crystals, and codeine pure precipitate, imported at the port of New York, were classified by the collector of customs as salts of opium and assessed for duty at $1 per ounce under the provisions of paragraph 43 of the tariff act of 1897, which, in so far as pertinent, reads as follows:

43. Opium, * * * one dollar per pound, morphia or morphine, sulphate of, and all alkaloids or salts of opium, one dollar per ounce; * * *.

The importer protested that these several articles of merchandise were not alkaloids or salts of opium within- the purview of paragraph 43, but that they were either medicinal preparations dutiable at the rate of 25 per cent ad valorem under paragraph 67 or paragraph 68, or chemical compounds dutiable at the same rate under the provisions of paragraph 3 of said act.

Paragraphs 67 and 68 and paragraph 3, in so far as pertinent, are as follows:

67. Medicinal preparations containing alcohol, or in the preparation of which alcohol is used, not specially provided for in this act, fifty-live cents per pound, but in no case shall the same pay less than twenty-five per centum ad valorem.
68. Medicinal preparations not containing alcohol or in the preparation of which alcohol is not used, not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; * * *.
3. Alkalies, alkaloids, distilled oils, essential oils, expressed oils, rendered oils, and all combinations of the foregoing, and all chemical compounds and salts not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem.

[42]*42The Board of General Appraisers overruled the protest and the importers appealed.

At the hearing before the board, Dr. Albert Knoll, a member of the firm of Knoll & Co., manufacturers of the goods under discussion, testified on behalf of the importers that he was chief chemist of the firm and the inventor of the process for the synthetic production of codeine from morphine. He stated that the merchandise in controversy was synthetically prepared by dissolving morphine in an alcoholic solution of alkali and then heating the resulting solution to a temperature of 110° C. under pressure, after the addition of a methyl ether. On this evidence the appellant contends that the goods in question, whether in the form of pure codeine, codeine sulphate, or codeine hydrochlorate, are not alkaloids or salts of opium but salts of morphine, and that they are therefore not dutiable under paragraph 43, inasmuch as that paragraph does not provide for salts of morphine. To sustain that contention, the provision in paragraph 43 covering "all alkaloids or salts of opium” would have to be limited to those alkaloids or salts secured directly and immediately from opium as the raw material, and that limitation we can not make without doing violence to what we think was the manifest purpose of the legislation. As appears from the authorities, opium is a very complex substance indeed, containing, as it does, 18 and possibly 20 different organic bases, to say nothing of neutral compounds or of the acids with which some of the bases are combined. A few of the bases are free, but most of them are combined with sulphuric and meconic acids. Whether combined or free, however, none of the bases can be directly or immediately separated or obtained from opium. Indeed,, a succession of mechanical and chemical processes is apparently required to isolate the base desired and to eliminate those not required. Townes’ Elementary Chemistry (p. 1008); Dictionary of Applied Chemistry (Thorpe, Yol. Ill, p. 71).

The bases in opium, so far as identified by science, are morphine codeine, hydrocotarnine, thebaine, pseudomorphine, codamine, lauda-nine, laúdanosme, meconidine, papaverine, lanthopine, protopine, cryptopine, narcotine, oxynarcotine, narceine, gnoscopine, tritopine. These several organic bases constitute the active vegetable principles which are peculiar to opium, and as, like alkalies, they have the faculty of chemically combining with acids to form salts, they are generically known as alkaloids of opium. See "Alkaloid” (Century Dictionary, Worcester’s Dictionary, and Watts’ Dictionary of Chemistry); "Opium” (Townes’ Elementary Chemistry, 1008); “Opium” (Dictionary of Applied Chemistry, Thorpe, 71).

At the time the tariff act of 1897 was passed these organic bases were known to be alkaloids derived only from opium as the basic material, and when provision for alkaloids of opium was made in [43]*43paragraph 43 of that act it must be presumed that Congress had these substances in mind and that the generic designation ‘ alkaloids * * * of opium” was intended by it to cover each of the alkaloids above enumerated just as specifically as if it had been mentioned by name. What concerned Congress when it determined to subject alkaloids of opium to a duty of $1 per ounce was not the chemical or other processes by which those substances were produced, but the substances themselves. In other words, what Congress was aiming at was morphine, codeine, thebaine, papaverine, narcotine, etc., belonging to the class of organic bases known as alkaloids of opium, and that it elected to identify these several compounds by a group term which included them all rather than by an eo nomine enumeration finds its explanation, we think, in the fact that the general designation had the merit of brevity and at the same time was broad enough to embrace not only the known alkaloids of opium but also those which might be discovered.

But even if the statutory expression “alkaloids * * * of opium” were not considered as a class designation and were given the same meaning as if it had read “alkaloids derived from opium,” we are of opinion that the codeine here involved would still be dutiable under paragraph 43, inasmuch as it was derived from opium as the basic material. True, it was not directly produced from opium, but from morphine. Nevertheless, as morphine is a' constituent of opium and is itself obtained from opium, we think that codeine evolved from morphia may very properly be regarded as a derivative of opium, since its production as well as that of morphine is wholly dependent on the existence of the opium.

It may be, as contended by the importers, that the chemical combination brought about by dissolving morphia in an alcoholic solution of alkali and then adding methyl ether after heating produces a salt, but whether it does or not, the fact remains that the product is identical with codeine, which is a recognized alkaloid of opium, and therefore dutiable under paragraph 43, as we interpret that provision.

Considering, as we do, that codeine is provided for in paragraph 43 under the generic designation “alkaloids * * * of opium,” the next question to be determined is whether the hydrochlorate of codeine and the sulphate of codeine, which are not alkaloids of opium, can be classified as “salts of opium.” A salt, chemically speaking, is a compound of a basic with an acidic radical. See “Salt” (chem.), Standard Dictionary. Codeine hydrochlorato is a chemical combination of the organic base codeine with hydrochloric acid and codeine sulphate is a combination of the same base with sulphuric acid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ct. Cust. 41, 1915 WL 20724, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merck-v-united-states-ccpa-1915.